Search
Close this search box.
Search
Close this search box.
Search
Close this search box.

SAFe Program Dependency Board Retrospective

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
WhatsApp
Program Board Discussion

Learning from the SAFe Program Dependency Board

The SAFe Program Board or Program Dependency Board is a key artifact used in PI Planning and Execution. The ART Teams and Stakeholders used it to align, anticipate risks, and adapt the plan accordingly.

This “inspection and adaptation” of the plan based on insights from the Program Dependency Board is “first loop learning” – making changes in the plan based on what we see.

Deeper Learning from the Program Dependency Board

What we rarely see, though, is deeper learning from what the Program Dependency Board shows us. It’s like the good old times when you would see a project manager / PMO working their MSProject Gantt Chart, moving things around, but rarely stopping to ask deeper questions about the base structure of their plans and why they’re based on a waterfall model.

Program Dependency Boards can drive deeper learning about the structure of our ART and its alignment with the kind of mission/vision we’re pursuing and the backlog of Features we’re working on. If we see too much red yarn on our boards it isn’t something to be proud of. Yes we can be proud that we identified the dependency and even more that we were able to massage our PI plan to deal with it in a reasonable way. But too much red yarn means too many dependencies. Too many dependencies mean our Value Stream Network isn’t configured well. It means we should probably look at ways to reconfigure the network (meaning restructure teams and maybe even the ART).

When to do this deeper learning

I get it. This sort of learning is hard to pursue in the heat of PI Planning. And all too often when PI Planning is done and we have a workable plan in hand its tempting to just move into execution. Resist the temptation. Let the dust settle, but find the time that makes sense to have a deeper retrospective that is based on the patterns you see on the Program Board. This can be a good discussion in your Scrum of Scrums or with an extended forum that includes the wider ART leadership.

There’s no need to wait for the next Inspect and Adapt. It’s fresh now and outcomes from this retrospective might anyhow require a lot of refinement and consideration before they’re actionable. Start the process early in the PI so hopefully, you’ll be in a position to reconfigure the network going into the next PI as needed.

A typical pattern is when such a retrospective raises the need to rerun a Value Stream Identification workshop.

Validating the Value Stream Design Hypothesis – A Key but often Skipped step

Speaking of the VSI workshop – one key element in it that many practitioners skip is the validation of your value stream design hypothesis. After identifying a Development Value Stream, run some water through the pipes – take some work in the form of Features or even higher-level Epics/Themes and explore how they will flow through this value stream/ART/Solution ART. If the work flows nicely with a minimal number of dependencies you found a good setup. If even in this “dry run” you already see you have too many dependencies – time to rework the design!

PI Planning Dry Run

And yes – what this means is that ideally, even in this early phase, before even launching the ART, you should consider doing a light version of PI Planning as a dry run with the value stream design you have in mind – to see that it makes sense. You don’t want to train everybody, spend a serious amount of time on preparing to launch the ART, and then find its not a self-sufficient ART or that it’s comprised of teams that aren’t self-sufficient.

Summary

I’ve talked about some recommended practices here, some are implicitly mentioned in SAFe, some complement the formal guidance. The key point I wanted to make is how important is it to aim for the right value stream network and to continuously inspect and adapt so that value can easily flow with minimal dependencies and slowdowns. And if your value stream network is configured well, everything else becomes much easier.

 

Subscribe for Email Updates:

Categories:

Tags:

Scrum and XP
Continuous Improvement
Hybrid Work
System Integration Environments
Scrum Master
Agile Games and Exercises
Agile Israel
Lean Agile Management
AgileSparks
Lean Agile
Team Flow
Enterprise DevOps
Agile Product Development
Legacy Code
Elastic Leadership
Large Scale Scrum
Sprint Planning
Tools
Risk Management on Agile Projects
Test Driven Development
Product Ownership
Releases Using Lean
Planning
Agile Games
RTE Role
Agile Delivery
System Team
Jira admin
Agile Testing Practices
Lean Agile Leadership
Continuous Deployment
Continuous Planning
Scrum
System Archetypes
Continuous Delivery
Jira
QA
Lean Agile Organization
Lean Budgeting
Agile Development
Limiting Work in Progress
Nexus
EOS®
Scrum.org
lean agile change management
Kanban Basics
Frameworks
Jira Plans
Legacy Enterprise
The Kanban Method
The Agile Coach
Introduction to Test Driven Development
Webinar
Tips
Product Management
Kanban 101
Operational Value Stream
Kaizen
Reading List
TDD
Sprint Iteration
Jira Cloud
Change Management
Entrepreneurial Operating System®
Agile Marketing
Artificial Intelligence
NIT
Agility
Software Development Estimation
Scrum Values
Accelerate Value Delivery At Scale
Agile Outsourcing
An Appreciative Retrospective
Quality Assurance
Acceptance Test-Driven Development
Development Value Streams
POPM
SAFe DevOps
Agile Mindset
Perfection Game
Agile Techniques
RSA
Agile Exercises
Agile
Games and Exercises
DevOps
Story Slicing
Lean Risk Management
SA
Nexus Integration Team
ScrumMaster Tales
speed @ scale
Certification
Release Train Engineer
Agile Israel Events
Kanban Kickstart Example
Managing Risk on Agile Projects
Achieve Business Agility
Agile Project Management
Nexus vs SAFe
Certified SAFe
Professional Scrum Product Owner
Software Development
Agile Release Planning
Risk-aware Product Development
User stories
Principles of Lean-Agile Leadership
SAFe Release Planning
Agile Program
Lean-Agile Software Development
Self-organization
speed at scale
Introduction to ATDD
Sprint Retrospectives
IT Operations
PI Planning
Agile for Embedded Systems
Agile and DevOps Journey
chatgpt
Spotify
Agile Project
LAB
Manage Budget Creation
Coaching Agile Teams
Nexus and SAFe
Agile in the Enterprise
Pomodoro Technique
Portfolio for Jira
Process Improvement
WIP
Scrum Guide
Lean and Agile Principles and Practices
Systems Thinking
Keith Sawyer
agileisrael
Iterative Incremental Development
Covid19
Lean Agile Basics
ATDD vs. BDD
Advanced Roadmaps
ART Success
Kaizen Workshop
Scrum Primer
BDD
Lean Startup
Agile Basics
predictability
Agile India
ATDD
Value Streams
SAFe
Lean Software Development
Code
Scrum Master Role
Applying Agile Methodology
PI Objectives
Agile Community
Effective Agile Retrospectives
Agile Assembly Architecture
SPC
Lean and Agile Techniques
Business Agility
Rapid RTC
Atlassian
Managing Projects
Risk Management in Kanban
Kanban Game
RTE
GanttBan
A Kanban System for Software Engineering
Presentation
Agile Product Ownership
Engineering Practices
Agile Contracts Best Practices
Program Increment
Scrum With Kanban
Lean-Agile Budgeting
Atlaassian
Daily Scrum
Video
What Is Kanban
Implementation of Lean and Agile
Scaled Agile Framework
Amdocs
ALM Tools
Nexus and Kanban
AI Artificial Intelligence
LeSS
ROI
Agile Release Management
Professional Scrum with Kanban
Built-In Quality
Continuous Integration
Professional Scrum Master
AI
LPM
Agile Risk Management
Slides
ARTs
Kanban
AgileSparks
Logo
Enable registration in settings - general

Contact Us

Request for additional information and prices

AgileSparks Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter, and stay updated on the latest Agile news and events

This website uses Cookies to provide a better experience
Shopping cart